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WOMEN IN CHINATOWN & COUNTRY ASPECTS

The modern young women of China are as chic, as intelligent, as poised, and as efficient in all spheres of life, as are modern worn eh everywhere, states an English exchange.

And. like other modern young women, they are doing things that must make their grandmothers turn in their graves.

For instance, their grandmothers, swaying on “lily” feet, practised tho doctrine that woman’s place is in tho home. Modern Chinese girls, freed from the cruel poetic fiction about “swaying on lily feet,” nimbly play tennis, basketball, and hockey; danco waltzes, blues, and the carioca.

Boldly, like men, they leave home to earn their living in strange cities, competing against men in all vocations and professions. They are teachers, doctors, nurses, lawyers, journalists, dentists, aviators, traders, architects.

But in cities and hamlets remote from the coast and from foreign influenoe, tradition, centuries old, still holds the people in thrall. Here small girls shriek with pain while their feet are being tightly bound, although the laws of the Republic forbade the practice fifteen years ago. As a startling illustration of the contiguity in China of the ultra-modern and the ancient regime, I have on my desk two clippings taken from a Chinese newspaper. The first, showing the photograph of a very pretty young matron named Mrs. Elsie Soong, describes a Chinese fashion parade in which the mannequins were Shaighai society girls. Mrs. Soong, .who organised the show, was educated in the United States, is a dress designer, and also a member of Shanghai’s younger smart set. The newspaper reminds readers that a few months earlier Mrs. Soong had made a reputation as an amateur actress in a local performance in English of “Lady Precious Stream.” A generation ago no respectable Chinese woman would have appeared in public either as mannequin or actress.

The other clipping tells the tragic story of a modern girl whose behaviour offended custodians of the ancient regime. Not twenty miles from Peking she was buried alive because she had dared to wear fashionable clothes and to go freely about the streets of her native village. Her father, a prosperous farmer named Liang, was the head of an old and respected family of Nankehchuang. As a concession to Republican ideas, lie had sent his daughter to a girls’ school in Peking. Meantime she had been betrothed to tho son of his friend Wang, who, like himself, was a farmer of humble but ancient and honourable lineage. To the sorrow of her own family and the horror of her future parents-in-law, Miss Liang, her schooling finished, returned to Nankeh-chuang wearing short-sleeved, tight-fitting gowns, her hair bobbed and curled. These might have been changed, but the girl showed an intractable spirit regarding the time-honoured rituals and taboos of her native hamlet.

Wang conferred bitterly with Liang, and tho two agreed that both families had been disgraced. There was only one way to regain honour for the respectable names so besmirched. They took that way. Carrying the girl in a closed sedan chair to a secluded spot m the country, they dug a deep grave and buried her there alive, purging the village of the curls and finery, and the intractable spirit that had presumed to flaunt its freedom in tho face of tradition.

Bpot lights of fashion are announced by Baird’s, of Hastings 4 the quality drapers. Prestige hosiery, chosen for quality Uy all discriminating buyers, has arrived iu all the newest shades, including the new gold tones. It is un wise to experiment when selecting hosiery. Reliance upon this guaranteed make will assure you of tho best value, quality and style that only specialisation can give. For early spring wear Baird's have some eery dashing sports hats in tree bark niatalasse, smartly stitched and shaped, beeo.niing styles, flic new blousettes for wear with costumes and suits arc charming. A beautiful selection is showing in laces, satins and georgettes. Belts are another important accessory, and all the latest novelties in suede, leather and niacrame arc included in the vast assortment now on display in Baird’s fancy section.

People require optical aid because their vision it either indistinct or causes them pain. The estimation of their eye defect* is the work of the skilled optician. H. M. Bennett, Ltd., Consulting Opticians, Hastings Street,

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBTRIB19360918.2.148

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXVI, Issue 236, 18 September 1936, Page 14

Word Count
716

WOMEN IN CHINATOWN & COUNTRY ASPECTS Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXVI, Issue 236, 18 September 1936, Page 14

WOMEN IN CHINATOWN & COUNTRY ASPECTS Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXVI, Issue 236, 18 September 1936, Page 14

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